Chase v. Trimble

158 P.2d 247, 69 Cal. App. 2d 44, 1945 Cal. App. LEXIS 623
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 30, 1945
DocketCiv. 14729
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 158 P.2d 247 (Chase v. Trimble) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chase v. Trimble, 158 P.2d 247, 69 Cal. App. 2d 44, 1945 Cal. App. LEXIS 623 (Cal. Ct. App. 1945).

Opinion

DESMOND, P. J.

Plaintiff commenced a quiet-title action on August 11, 1943, against numerous defendants, including Raleigh P. Trimble and Helen Kay Trimble, appellants herein. A default was entered against several of the defendants after the time for answering had expired, and other defendants, subsequent to the commencement of the action, executed quitclaim deeds and were dismissed as parties defendant. The two mentioned defendants, Mr. and Mrs. Trimble, appeal from the judgment quieting title in plaintiff to a particularly described parcel of real property situated in the Rancho El Rio de Santa Clara o’ La Colonia, County of Ventura, State of California.

*46 There is no factual dispute in this case since it was presented to the trial court upon an agreed statement of facts, which are, briefly, these: On April 25, 1934, plaintiff (owner of the fee) and his wife, as landowner-lessors, entered into an oil and gas lease with defendant Raleigh P. Trimble, as lessee, covering the property above mentioned, which lease was duly recorded. The lease was to continue for a period of five years and so long thereafter as drilling operations on the premises were being conducted or deferred under provisions thereof. Lessee was to have the sole and exclusive right of prospecting the premises and drilling and was required to start the drilling of a well within 90 days from the date of the agreement, but was permitted, under the terms of the lease, to extend the period for commencing the first well by giving lessor written notice and paying a monthly rental of a stipulated price per acre. Lessor was to receive as royalty “a sum equal to one-eighth of the market price of all oil produced by it from said premises,” as well as one-eighth of the proceeds from the sale of any gas sold by lessee. The lease also provided that nonperformance by lessee of any of the acts or covenants required under the lease, ninety days after written complaint by lessor, at lessor’s option would constitute a forfeiture of lessee’s rights. Drilling operations could “be suspended or curtailed . . . when there is no market for the oil, or so long as the established and posted market price offered by the major oil purchasing companies for oil of the quality produced on said premises, in the district in which the premises are located, shall be less than seventy-five cents per barrel at the well. ...”

On April 22, 1936, almost two years after the execution of the lease, lessee Raleigh P. Trimble and Helen Kay Trimble, his wife, assigned “all their right, title and interest” in the lease to Yaca Oil Exploration Company, hereinafter called assignee, reserving to themselves an overriding royalty of 2y2 per cent “from the gross proceeds of any oil and/or gas produced and sold from any and/or all of the lands embraced,” which instrument was also duly recorded. On July 8, 1938, more than four years after the execution of the lease, the assignee quitclaimed the property, including all rights in the lease, to the plaintiff, the original lessor. No drilling operations on the premises were ever started by the lessee or the assignee. Nor is there any indication in the record that any rental was ever paid for an extension of time in which to *47 commence drilling operations. Two wells were drilled on parcels of land adjoining the premises involved in this action, prior to the assignee’s execution of the quitclaim deed. The oil produced from those wells at no time was marketable at a price in excess of 38 cents per barrel, and the established and posted market price offered by the major oil purchasing companies, in the district in which the premises were located, for oil of the quality produced from said wells, was less than 75 cents per barrel at the well. No notice of any default of any of the terms or covenants of the lease was ever served by lessor upon lessee pursuant to the terms of the lease. Plaintiff’s quiet-title action was filed more than five years from the date of the execution of the lease. In answer to plaintiff’s complaint, defendants entered a general denial of each and every allegation, and further alleged that the overriding royalty of 2per cent reserved under their assignment to the Vaca Oil Exploration Company constituted a valid and subsisting lien and claim superior to the right, title and interest of the plaintiff.

Upon these facts, the trial court found for plaintiff and by its judgment the title to the real property involved was quieted against “all claims, demands, or preten[s]ions, of said Defendants. ’ ’

Appellants state that the sole question presented on the appeal is whether an assignee of a lessee under an oil and gas lease, through voluntary surrender by quitclaim of the leasehold, can divest the original lessee of an overriding royalty interest reserved in the transfer of the lease to the assignee?

The interest which the lessee acquired under the oil and gas lease was a profit á prendre, an interest in real property (La Laguna Ranch Co. v. Dodge (1941), 18 Cal.2d 132, 135 [114 P.2d 351, 135 A.L.R. 546]; Callahan v. Martin (1935), 3 Cal.2d 110, 122 [43 P.2d 788, 101 A.L.R. 871]; Dabney v. Edwards (1935), 5 Cal.2d 1, 11 [53 P.2d 962, 103 A.L.R. 822]; Dabney-Johnston Oil Corp. v. Walden (1935), 4 Cal.2d 637, 649 [52 P.2d 237]). By its terms the lease permitted an assignment, in whole or in part, by either the lessor or the lessee. By the recorded assignment the lessee and his wife assigned not only all their right, title and interest in the lease under consideration, subject to a reservation of a 2y2 per cent overriding royalty, but also in eight additional *48 leases involving other neighboring lands subject to the same reservation, and in consideration of an agreement that the assignee pay to them the sum of $40,000 “payable only, however, out of ten per cent. (10%) of any oil and/or gas produced and sold from ground covered by the said nine leaseholds. ’ ’ Thus, the sole and exclusive right to operate, i. e. the entire profit a, prendre, was transferred to the assignee with no reservation on the part of the lessee and his wife of any right to enter the premises for the purpose of drilling for oil and gas; their only interest was that of an overriding royalty,—a fractional share of the oil and gas produced and sold.

In La Laguna Ranch Co. v. Dodge, supra, where the court considered the question whether the interest of the holder of a fractional share in the production of oil, created out of the estate of the operating lessee, survived after the lessee’s voluntary surrender of the leasehold by quitclaim deed, it was held (p. 140) that while the overriding royalties were interests in real property, they “were not unlimited but were determinable interests limited to the duration of the existing lease.

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158 P.2d 247, 69 Cal. App. 2d 44, 1945 Cal. App. LEXIS 623, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chase-v-trimble-calctapp-1945.